In many Texas communities, nursing home family visits and phone updates can create a false sense of security—especially when the resident is stable on the day you stop by. Pressure ulcers often worsen in the background, tied to hours of immobility, inconsistent repositioning, or delayed escalation when redness first appears.
For Jacksonville-area families, it’s common to hear explanations like:
- “The resident’s condition changed.”
- “The wound is just slow to heal.”
- “We documented everything—sometimes it’s hard to see early.”
A lawyer’s job is to test those statements against the records: risk assessments, turning/repositioning logs, skin check documentation, wound care notes, and care plan compliance.


